Fuerza Regida's 'This is Our Dream' Tour: How to Secure Tickets for Remaining Four US Stadium Shows

Fuerza Regida's first-ever U.S. stadium tour, "This Is Our Dream," is now in its final stretch. Four shows remain — in Los Angeles, Houston, Arlington, and Flushing — and tickets are still available, with entry starting as low as $78. USA Today reports the San Bernardino, California group has already sold over 110,000 tickets across its first three dates, grossing $15.7 million in its opening week.
The band ranked No. 3 on Pollstar's global LIVE75 touring chart after week one — a position usually reserved for artists like Bad Bunny or Luke Combs. Frontman Jesús Ortiz Paz, known as JOP, summed up the moment simply: "We feel really happy. We've worked really hard for this... But to be honest, it's just normal."
The next show is July 18 at Dodger Stadium in Los Angeles. Resale tickets there start at roughly $182. On July 26, the tour moves to Daikin Park in Houston, where secondary market tickets begin around $124. Globe Life Field in Arlington hosts the July 31 show, with some resale seats available for as low as $90 via Gametime.
The tour closes August 7 at Citi Field in Flushing, New York. That final show has the lowest entry point — standard tickets start at $105 before fees on primary markets, and resale options on StubHub and Vivid Seats begin around $78 to $87. USA Today notes Live Nation is the official promoter and Ticketmaster handles primary sales for all four remaining dates.
Fuerza Regida formed in 2015 in San Bernardino. They started by playing backyard carne asada parties and local cover gigs. A decade later, they opened this tour June 18 at Petco Park in San Diego — drawing 37,770 fans. They followed that with sell-outs at Oracle Park in San Francisco and T-Mobile Park in Seattle.
The band plays regional Mexican music — specifically a style called corridos tumbados, which blends traditional Mexican sounds with urban beats. Very few acts in this genre have ever headlined MLB or NFL stadiums in the U.S. JOP said the album behind the tour, 2025's 111XPANTIA, was built around "the power of the mind and the concept of the law of attraction."
Globe Life Field in Arlington and other stadium venues on the tour enforce strict no-cash policies. Fans must use cards or mobile payments. MLB bag-size rules also apply at baseball stadiums — bags larger than a clutch or small clear bag will not get through security. Parking at most stops is cashless too.
Doors typically open 90 minutes before showtime. Tennessean advises fans to check each venue's official website for specific entry rules before the show. Buying through Ticketmaster directly is the safest way to avoid fake tickets sold on unofficial sites.
Fuerza Regida's stadium run is being watched closely by the music industry. USA Today reports that Pollstar analysts see the tour as proof that regional Mexican music is no longer a niche genre. Promoters like Live Nation are expected to invest heavily in similar stadium tours for other rising acts starting in 2027.
JOP is also a cultural symbol for first- and second-generation Mexican-Americans. He often mixes English and Spanish on stage. His success shows that identity does not require perfect bilingual fluency to connect with millions of fans. The band's average of 36,791 fans per show so far backs that up with hard numbers.
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